Found in the garage. Left alone with the door open to allow it to leave.
babies on board
One of the handful of squirrels that regularly visit this winter. This one seems to have a deformity in tail and hind legs tho it gets up on the bird feeder as good as anyone else. Smart..
Too dark to get a good pic.
My cobweb hen & chicks are blooming. The rosettes that bloom will die, but all the offsets that don't will carry on growth for the clone.
These little plants are too small, slow-growing, and drought-loving to survive long in a flowerbed here, but I've kept them going for years in a maybe 20" wide, terra-cotta trough with a sandy soil mix. It provides a small, dry microhabitat for Sempervivums and little digging wasps (Gorytes) that like to nest there.
Let the cat out with a harness thingy maybe for 30min. She was very subdued in the jacket, I didn't even click on the leash. She stayed on the paths and sniffed plants. We do have at least 2 jacket free cats that visit the garden (which we chase off with water guns)
dozens flying east in the mornings and west in the eves; they rarely land in the yard. peanuts :D
Fits the eastern palm warbler description; and was foraging for awhile around the front yard
3rd day in a row I've found a little honeybee visiting the birdbath
This guy was carrying dry grasses and seemed to be building a nest. The 5 little "sticks" were all flown in by it. The tube is a left over stem from a rattlesnake master. We intentionally leave some longer stems when we cut them back in April/May.
Pic 7-8 were taken 2 days later. The entrance has been closed!
Our backyard hawks, hanging out above the bird feeder. Female on the left, male on the right.
Wow it has been a month since our last sighting of 'Silver'; since my last observation actually. We had already concluded the worst.. but there s/he is! :)
Still dragging that back foot, hobbling across the driveway
Sharing food atop the neighbors chimney
'Silver' with the bad back leg has visited the bird feeder about once a day the past week or so! despite the handful of other squirrels that will run her off and some big hawks that frequent thru here...
This is exciting! I think these colorful bugs were eating honeysuckle. I photographed the adult and the nymph on Japanese honeysuckle (Lonicera japonica) but I also saw what looked like feeding damage on the young leaves of nearby Amur honeysuckle (L. maackii). Since both plant species are invasive here and these little bugs are charming, they're welcome to eat as much as they want. Biocontrol is encouraged. :)
The flying bee kept approaching the bee on the flower.
This one is still around, with the deformed tail and dragging a back leg. We don't go out when 'Silver' is here (as our kid named her) to give her the best chance of getting food. Other squirrels have run her off. Go go underdog..
Cardinal getting territorial with itself in this mirror. It was doing the same thing last week too. It spends a not-insignificant amount of time battling itself.
Sparrow seemed to be admiring him
The big reach technique. Pretty effective. A handful of squirrels visit this feeder and several different techniques are showcased.
on Aromatic Aster
On fennel.
Suburban native garden.